We determined the prevalence of allelic loss at 9p21 and mutations in CDKN2 in esophageal adenocarcinomas and investigated the order in which they occurred relative to the development of aneuploidy and cancer during neoplastic progression.
Recently, we demonstrated that disruption of the CSB gene reduces the spontaneous tumor rate in cancer predisposed Ink4a/ARF-/- mice as well as causing their embryo fibroblasts to proliferate more slowly and be more sensitive to UV-induced apoptosis.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a risk factor and a favorable prognostic factor for oropharyngeal carcinoma and p16 has been suggested as a surrogate marker for HPV-induced cancer.
The meta-analysis results showed that the frequency of p16 promoter methylation in cancer tissue/blood was significantly higher than that normal tissue/ blood (OR=5.46, 95%CI 3.12-9.55, P<0.0001) by random effects model with small heterogeneity.
Three known tumor suppressor genes, p16/CDKN2, BRCA2, and p53, all of which are important in the development of pancreatic carcinoma and frequently are involved in a variety of cancer syndromes, were analyzed.
It has been reported that p16 protein is overexpressed in many types of solid cancer and its aberrant expression may trigger the immune response, leading to the secretion of anti-p16 antibodies.
Adenovirus-Mediated Expression of the p14 Fusion-Associated Small Transmembrane Protein Promotes Cancer Cell Fusion and Apoptosis In Vitro but Does Not Provide Therapeutic Efficacy in a Xenograft Mouse Model of Cancer.
The reported association of abnormalities in the p16/Rb pathway with increased risk of malignancy prompted us to determine the expression of p16(INK4a) in a group of BLBC; the results were compared with a group of high-grade invasive carcinoma (HG-IC) of breast.
There was a 3.4-fold decrease in the expression of death-associated protein kinase and 2.2-fold decrease in gene expression of p16 in the cases compared to the controls, the lowest expression being in the cancer tissues.
Clinical and histologic characteristics of 182 patients with 429 CMM from families with a founder mutation in CDKN2A (p16-Leiden mutation) were compared with 7512 patients with 7842 CMM from a population-based cancer registry.
The INK4 proteins are commonly lost or inactivated by mutations in diverse types of cancer, and they represent established or candidate tumor suppressors.
It is noted that the immunohistochemical positivity of MDM2, CDK4, and p16 do not necessarily indicatemalignant neoplasm such as dedifferentiated liposarcoma.
A variety of cancer syndromes involving the P16 and BRCA2 genes, for example, also lead to pancreatic cancer, but the gene responsible for familial pancreatic cancer has not been identified so far.
Somatic genetic CDKN2A, TP53, and DNA content abnormalities are common in many human cancers and their precursors, including esophageal adenocarcinoma (EA) and Barrett's esophagus (BE), conditions for which aspirin and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have been proposed as possible chemopreventive agents; however, little is known about the ability of a biomarker panel to predict progression to cancer nor how NSAID use may modulate progression.